What happens when left meets right under equimolar and non-equimolar co-assembly of short peptide stereoisomers?

J Colloid Interface Sci

Department of Biological and Energy Chemical Engineering, China University of Petroleum (East China), 66 Changjiang West Road, Qingdao 266580, China. Electronic address:

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

The co-assembly of different peptide chains usually leads to the formation of intricate architectures and sophisticated functions in biological systems. Although the co-assembly of stereoisomeric peptides represents a facile and flexible strategy for the synthesis of peptide-based nanomaterials with novel structures and potentially interesting properties, there is a lack of a general knowledge on how different isomers pack during assembly. Through the combined use of simulations and experimental observations, we report that heterochiral pairing is preferred to homochiral pairing at the molecular scale but self-sorting dictates beyond the molecular level for the mixtures of the short stereoisomeric β-sheet peptides IK (Ile-Ile-Ile-Lys). Furthermore, we demonstrate that flat β-sheets and fibril morphology are always preferred to twisted ones during heterochiral pairing and subsequent assembly. However, the heterochiral pairing into flat morphology is not always at an equimolar ratio. Instead, a non-equimolar ratio (1:2) is observed for the mixing of homochiral IK and heterochiral IK, whose strand twisting degrees differ greatly. Such a study provides a paradigm for understanding the co-assembly of stereoisomeric peptides at the molecular scale and harnessing their blending for targeted nanostructures.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2024.02.140DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

heterochiral pairing
12
co-assembly stereoisomeric
8
stereoisomeric peptides
8
molecular scale
8
left meets
4
meets equimolar
4
equimolar non-equimolar
4
co-assembly
4
non-equimolar co-assembly
4
co-assembly short
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!